The Detroit Tigers' 83-year-old owner is clear that he and general manager Dave Dombrowski aren't focused on the future but are more interested in bringing a championship back to Detroit as soon as possible.

On Feb. 5, for ESPN Insider, senior baseball writer Keith Law released his list for the top 100 MLB prospects, which prompted Law to rank each team's farm system as a whole.

In the last several years, the Tigers have made a concerted effort to get as much talent on the major league club as possible, which has worked to the tune of back-to-back American League Central Championships and a World Series appearance last season.

But because Detroit has swapped over 20 minor leaguers the past few years in deals for major league players, the Tigers' farm system has been left relatively bare.

According to Law, phenom third basemen Nick Castellanos is the highest-ranked Tigers prospect, followed by Avisail Garcia and Bruce Rondon.

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But with Garcia likely to make the team out of Spring Training and Rondon going into the spring as the Tigers' closer, Castellanos is the only notable Detroit minor leaguer who is expected to make a major league impact in the next couple years.

The next seven players rounding out the Tigers' top-10 prospects are "a lot of lottery-ticket types in the lower minors, some of whom are really intriguing but very far away," according to Law.